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By way
of further explanation it is needful to correct certain
erroneous views regarding this sacrament which not only
misrepresent the actual practice of the Church but also lead to
a false interpretation of theological statement and historical
evidence. From what has been said it should be clear:
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that penance is not a mere human invention devised by
the Church to secure power over consciences or to relieve
the emotional strain of troubled souls; it is the ordinary
means appointed by Christ for the remission of sin. Man
indeed is free to obey or disobey, but once he has sinned,
he must seek pardon not on conditions of his own choosing
but on those which God has determined, and these for the
Christian are embodied in the Sacrament of Penance.
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No Catholic believes that a priest simply as an
individual man, however pious or learned, has power to
forgive sins. This power belongs to God alone; but He can
and does exercise it through the ministration of men. Since
He has seen fit to exercise it by means of this sacrament,
it cannot be said that the Church or the priest interferes
between the soul and God; on the contrary, penance is the
removal of the one obstacle that keeps the soul away from
God.
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It is not true that for the Catholic the mere "telling
of one's sins" suffices to obtain their forgiveness. Without
sincere sorrow and purpose of amendment, confession avails
nothing, the pronouncement of absolution is of no effect,
and the guilt of the sinner is greater than before.
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While this sacrament as a dispensation of Divine mercy
facilitates the pardoning of sin, it by no means renders sin
less hateful or its consequences less dreadful to the
Christian mind; much less does it imply permission to commit
sin in the future. In paying ordinary debts, as e.g., by
monthly settlements, the intention of contracting new debts
with the same creditor is perfectly legitimate; a similar
intention on the part of him who confesses his sins would
not only be wrong in itself but would nullify the sacrament
and prevent the forgiveness of sins then and there
confessed.
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Strangely enough, the opposite charge is often heard,
viz., that the confession of sin is intolerable and hard and
therefore alien to the spirit of Christianity and the loving
kindness of its Founder. But this view, in the first place,
overlooks the fact that Christ, though merciful, is also
just and exacting. Furthermore, however painful or
humiliating confession may be, it is but a light penalty for
the violation of God's law. Finally, those who are in
earnest about their salvation count no hardship too great
whereby they can win back God's friendship.
Both these accusations, of too great leniency and too great
severity, proceed as a rule from those who have no experience
with the sacrament and only the vaguest ideas of what the Church
teaches or of the power to forgive sins which the Church
received from Christ.
Teaching of the Church
The Council of Trent (1551) declares:
As a means of regaining grace and justice, penance was at
all times necessary for those who had defiled their souls
with any mortal sin. . . . Before the coming of Christ,
penance was not a sacrament, nor is it since His coming a
sacrament for those who are not baptized. But the Lord then
principally instituted the Sacrament of Penance, when, being
raised from the dead, he breathed upon His disciples saying:
'Receive ye the Holy Ghost. Whose sins you shall forgive,
they are forgiven them; and whose sins you shall retain,
they are retained' (John, xx, 22-23). By which action so
signal and words so clear the consent of all the Fathers has
ever understood that the power of forgiving and retaining
sins was communicated to the Apostles and to their lawful
successors, for the reconciling of the faithful who have
fallen after Baptism. (Sess. XIV, c. i)
Farther on the council expressly states that Christ left
priests, His own vicars, as judges (praesides et judices),
unto whom all the mortal crimes into which the faithful may have
fallen should be revealed in order that, in accordance with the
power of the keys, they may pronounce the sentence of
forgiveness or retention of sins" (Sess. XIV, c. v)
Power to Forgive Sins
It is noteworthy that the fundamental objection so often
urged against the Sacrament of Penance was first thought of by
the Scribes when Christ said to the sick man of the palsy: "Thy
sins are forgiven thee." "And there were some of the scribes
sitting there, and thinking in their hearts: Why doth this man
speak thus? he blasphemeth. Who can forgive sins but God only?"
But Jesus seeing their thoughts, said to them: "Which is easier
to say to the sick of the palsy: Thy sins are forgiven thee; or
to say, Arise, take up thy bed and walk? But that you may know
that the Son of man hath power on earth to forgive sins, (he
saith to the sick of the palsy,) I say to thee: Arise, take up
thy bed, and go into thy house" (Mark, ii, 5-11; Matt., ix,
2-7). Christ wrought a miracle to show that He had power to
forgive sins and that this power could be exerted not only in
heaven but also on earth. This power, moreover, He transmitted
to Peter and the other Apostles. To Peter He says: "And I will
give to thee the keys of the kingdom of heaven. And whatsoever
thou shalt bind upon earth, it shall be bound also in heaven:
and whatsoever thou shalt loose on earth, it shall be loosed
also in heaven" (Matt., xvi, 19). Later He says to all the
Apostles: "Amen I say to you, whatsoever you shall bind upon
earth, shall be bound also in heaven; and whatsoever you shall
loose upon earth, shall be loosed also in heaven" (Matt., xviii,
18). As to the meaning of these texts, it should be noted:
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that the "binding" and "loosing" refers not to physical
but to spiritual or moral bonds among which sin is certainly
included; the more so because
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the power here granted is unlimited -- "whatsoever
you shall bind, . . . whatsoever you shall loose";
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the power is judicial, i.e., the Apostles are authorized
to bind and to loose;
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whether they bind or loose, their action is ratified in
heaven. In healing the palsied man Christ declared that "the
Son of man has power on earth to forgive sins"; here He
promises that what these men, the Apostles, bind or loose on
earth, God in heaven will likewise bind or loose. (Cf. also
POWER OF THE KEYS.)
But as the Council of Trent declares, Christ principally
instituted the Sacrament of Penance after His Resurrection, a
miracle greater than that of healing the sick. "As the Father
hath sent me, I also send you. When he had said this, he
breathed on them; and he said to them: Receive ye the Holy
Ghost. Whose sins you shall forgive, they are forgiven them; and
whose sins you shall retain, they are retained' (John, xx,
21-23). While the sense of these words is quite obvious, the
following points are to be considered:
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Christ here reiterates in the plainest terms -- "sins",
"forgive", "retain" -- what He had previously stated in
figurative language, "bind" and "loose", so that this text
specifies and distinctly applies to sin the power of loosing
and binding.
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He prefaces this grant of power by declaring that the
mission of the Apostles is similar to that which He had
received from the Father and which He had fulfilled: "As the
Father hath sent me". Now it is beyond doubt that He came
into the world to destroy sin and that on various occasions
He explicitly forgave sin (Matt., ix, 2-8; Luke, v, 20; vii,
47; Apoc., i, 5), hence the forgiving of sin is to be
included in the mission of the Apostles.
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Christ not only declared that sins were forgiven, but
really and actually forgave them; hence, the Apostles are
empowered not merely to announce to the sinner that his sins
are forgiven but to grant him forgiveness-"whose sins you
shall forgive". If their power were limited to the
declaration "God pardons you", they would need a special
revelation in each case to make the declaration valid.
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The power is twofold -- to forgive or to retain, i.e.,
the Apostles are not told to grant or withhold forgiveness
nondiscriminately; they must act judicially, forgiving or
retaining according as the sinner deserves.
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The exercise of this power in either form (forgiving or
retaining) is not restricted: no distinction is made or even
suggested between one kind of sin and another, or between
one class of sinners and all the rest: Christ simply says
"whose sins".
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The sentence pronounced by the Apostles (remission or
retention) is also God's sentence -- "they are forgiven . .
. they are retained".
It is therefore clear from the words of Christ that the Apostles
had power to forgive sins. But this was not a personal
prerogative that was to erase at their death; it was granted to
them in their official capacity and hence as a permanent
institution in the Church -- no less permanent than the mission
to teach and baptize all nations. Christ foresaw that even those
who received faith and baptism, whether during the lifetime of
the Apostles or later, would fall into sin and therefore would
need forgiveness in order to be saved. He must, then, have
intended that the power to forgive should be transmitted from
the Apostles to their successors and be used as long as there
would be sinners in the Church, and that means to the end of
time. It is true that in baptism also sins are forgiven, but
this does not warrant the view that the power to forgive is
simply the power to baptize. In the first place, as appears from
the texts cited above, the power to forgive is also the power to
retain; its exercise involves a judicial action. But no such
action is implied in the commission to baptize (Matt., xxviii,
18-20); in fact, as the Council of Trent affirms, the Church
does not pass judgment on those who are not yet members of the
Church, and membership is obtained through baptism. Furthermore,
baptism, because it is a new birth, cannot be repeated, whereas
the power to forgive sins (penance) is to be used as often as
the sinner may need it. Hence the condemnation, by the same
Council, of any one "who, confounding the sacraments, should say
that baptism itself is the Sacrament of Penance, as though these
two sacraments were not distinct and as though penance were not
rightly called the second plank after shipwreck" (Sess. XIV,
can. 2 de sac. poen.).
These pronouncements were directed against the Protestant
teaching which held that penance was merely a sort of repeated
baptism; and as baptism effected no real forgiveness of sin but
only an external covering over of sin through faith alone, the
same, it was alleged, must be the case with penance. This, then,
as a sacrament is superfluous; absolution is only a declaration
that sin is forgiven through faith, and satisfaction is needless
because Christ has satisfied once for all men. This was the
first sweeping and radical denial of the Sacrament of Penance.
Some of the earlier sects had claimed that only priests in the
state of grace could validly absolve, but they had not denied
the existence of the power to forgive. During all the preceding
centuries, Catholic belief in this power had been so clear and
strong that in order to set it aside Protestantism was obliged
to strike at the very constitution of the Church and reject the
whole content of Tradition.
Please contact
Father Howard Remski, F.S.S.P. if you have questions
regarding Penance or Confession.
Phone:
405.440.9168
Fax:
405.782.0767
email:
admin@okclatinmass.com
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